Hello all and a profuse "thank yous" to all who responded to my query about debugging my circa 1965 CW 6146B transmitter!

Two things seemed to make a big improvement today:

1.) I moved the neutralization capacitor in order to shorten the wire leads that connect to it. Actually, I still had issueswith PA oscillations even after re-locating the capacitor. So, I was just going to remove it from the circuit and see howthe transmitter performed without it. I discovered that the capacitor's rotor is close enough to the 6146 to capacitive coupleeven with no wire lead connected between the capacitor's rotor and 6146B plate! (To neutralize, I used the technique of removing the plate and screen voltages to the 6146, ran the oscillator, and adjusted the neutralizing capacitor for null at the antenna output.)

2.) I moved the 150 pF to ground as per KC2ZFA's suggestion. (The newer evolution of this design is wired in this mannerin the ARRL handbooks.)

Bottom line, I can run my screen current at 2.5 mA with no no-oscillator-start-up problems so far. My plate current is still about 150 mA butmy cross point needle meter says that I'm delivering at least 80 Watts into my Heathkit Cantenna.

(I may experiment by changing the 150 pF to 1500 pF and add a 10 Ohm resistor to the grid circuit as the ARRL handbook illustrates in newerversions ..)

(To neutralize, I used the technique of removing the plate and screen voltages to the 6146, ran the oscillator, and adjusted the neutralizing capacitor for null at the antenna output.)

if your PA is not neutralized then you should be getting lots of grid current variation as you turn the plate tune capacitor (with a dummy load on and no plate/screen volts). So another way to neutralize is to tune the neutralization capacitor so that the grid current stays constant as you turn the plate cap through its range.

Hope you had luck making the 150pf bigger. I reckoned it much too small. It needs to be 1000pf or greater to give rf ground return to the bottom end of L1,2 & C1 I believe. Then as a potential divider with C2, it serves to neutralise 0.22 pf anode-grid capacity, if neutralising is required at all.

I think RFC4 & 22R has been drawn in the wrong place, and is intended as a VHF parasitic stopper to be connected to anode and other connections.

Yes, I've noticed that the parasitic suppressor has been moved in the schematic diagrams forall the newer versions of this transmitter in the ARRL handbooks.

Another nit that I've noticed is that several extra "fly-specks" are present in the 1965 schematicthat usually indicate multiple connections at a given wiring junction. These extra fly-specks gonowhere .. i.e., they are situated where a wire takes a 90 degree turn. It's as if someone wasediting the schematic and didn't finish the job ..

(I think they're called "fly-specks" .. the little "dot" that indicates that two wires connect wherethey cross each other)

if you have a 500 or 1000 pF feed-thru capacitor use it instead of grounding that 150 pF (or itsreplacement) under the chassis and then running a wire through the chassis. The neutralizingcap can be soldered directly to the top side of the feed-thru capacitor and, if properly placed,the bottom side of the feed-thru can be soldered directly to C1 or S2 (whichever is closer).

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